Skip to content
Library Home
Start Over
Research Databases
E-Journals
Course Reserves
Library Home
Login to library account
English
Deutsch
Español
Français
Italiano
日本語
Nederlands
Português
Português (Brasil)
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Türkçe
עברית
Gaeilge
Cymraeg
Ελληνικά
Català
Euskara
Русский
Čeština
Suomi
Svenska
polski
Dansk
slovenščina
اللغة العربية
বাংলা
Galego
Tiếng Việt
Hrvatski
हिंदी
Հայերէն
Українська
Language
Library Catalog
All Fields
Title
Author
Subject
Call Number
ISBN/ISSN
Find
Advanced Search
|
Browse
|
Search Tips
Moral Rightness
Cite this
Text this
Email this
Print
Export Record
Export to RefWorks
Export to EndNoteWeb
Export to EndNote
Save to List
Permanent link
Moral Rightness by David Haslett.
Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author:
Haslett, David
(Author)
Corporate Author:
SpringerLink (Online service)
Format:
eBook
Language:
English
Published:
Dordrecht :
Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,
1974.
Edition:
1st ed. 1974.
Series:
Springer eBook Collection.
Subjects:
Ethics.
Electronic resources (E-books)
Online Access:
Click to view e-book
Holy Cross Note:
Loaded electronically.
Electronic access restricted to members of the Holy Cross Community.
Holdings
Description
Table of Contents
Similar Items
Staff View
Table of Contents:
I. Confirming Answers to Moral Questions
1. Introduction
2. The Right and the Good According to Lewis
3. Evaluative Sentences Analyzed
4. Ambiguities in Moral Questions
II. Toward an Approach to Ethical Justification
5. Lewis’ Approach to Ethical Justification
6. Rationality as More Than Consistency
7. An Initial Look at Another Approach
8. What is Intrinsically Good and Why: The Outline of an Argument
9. Justification and Morality Enforcement
III. The Fundamental Imperative of Rationality
10. Absolute, Objective, and Subjective Rationality
11. The Ideal Observer Standpoint
12. Rationality Where Probabilities Differ
13. The Rationale
14. Rationality, Prudential Goodness, and an Alleged Paradox
IV. The Maximum Social Goodness Imperative
15. The Golden Rule
16. “Social Goodness” Defined
17. What Counts as an Act
18. The General Use
19. The General Use as Morally Fundamental
V. The Ideal Observer Moral Code
20. The Ideal Observer Criterion
21. The Need for Simplicity, Ease of Application, and Uniformity
22. Exceptions to the Rules
23. Borderline Cases
24. Conflicting Rules
25. A Comparison with Classical Utilitarianism
26. A Comparison with the “Ideal Moral Code” Criterion
VI. The Plausibility of Justification
27. A Foreword on Justice
28. The Ideal Observer Moral Code vs. a Discriminatory Moral Code
29. Final Formulation of the Approach to Justification
30. Conclusion
Works Referred To.
Similar Items
Law, Morality and Rights
Published: (1983)
Medical Law and Moral Rights
by: Wellman, Carl
Published: (2005)
Moral Acquaintances and Moral Decisions Resolving Moral Conflicts in Medical Ethics
by: Hanson, Stephen S.
Published: (2009)
The Theory of Moral Capital
by: Wang, Xiaoxi
Published: (2018)
The Status of Morality
by: Carson, Thomas L.
Published: (1984)